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Quantum groups and noncommutative complex geometryÓ Buachalla, Réamonn January 2013 (has links)
Noncommutative Riemannian geometry is an area that has seen intense activity over the past 25 years. Despite this, noncommutative complex geometry is only now beginning to receive serious attention. The theory of quantum groups provides a large family of very interesting potential examples, namely the quantum flag manifolds. Thus far, only the irreducible quantum flag manifolds have been investigated as noncommutative complex spaces. In a series of papers, Heckenberger and Kolb showed that for each of these spaces, there exists a q-deformed Dolbeault double complex. In this thesis a comprehensive framework for noncommutative complex geometry on quantum homogeneous spaces is introduced. The main ingredients used are covariant differential calculi and Takeuchi's categorical equivalence for faithfully at quantum homogeneous spaces. A number of basic results are established, producing a simple set of necessary and sufficient conditions for noncommutative complex structures to exist. It is shown that when applied to the quantum projective spaces, this theory reproduces the q-Dolbeault double complexes of Heckenberger and Kolb. Furthermore, the framework is used to q-deform results from Borel{Bott{ Weil theory, and to produce the beginnings of a theory of noncommutative Kahler geometry.
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Emergent Matter of Quantum GeometryWan, Yidun 01 August 2009 (has links)
This thesis studies matter emergent as topological excitations of
quantum geometry in quantum gravity models. In these models, states
are framed four-valent spin networks embedded in a topological three
manifold, and the local evolution moves are dual Pachner moves.
We first formulate our theory of embedded framed four-valent spin
networks by proposing a new graphic calculus of these networks. With
this graphic calculus, we study the equivalence classes and the
evolution of these networks, and find what we call 3-strand braids,
as topological excitations of embedded four-valent spin networks.
Each 3-strand braid consists of two nodes that share three edges
that may or may not be braided and twisted. The twists happen to be
in units of 1/3. Under certain stability condition, some 3-strand
braids are stable.
Stable braids have rich dynamics encoded in our theory by dual
Pachner moves. Firstly, all stable braids can propagate as induced
by the expansion and contraction of other regions of their host spin
network under evolution. Some braids can also propagate actively, in
the sense that they can exchange places with substructures adjacent
to them in the graph under the local evolution moves. Secondly, two
adjacent braids may have a direct interaction: they merge under the
evolution moves to form a new braid if one of them falls into a
class called actively interacting braids. The reverse of a direct
interaction may happen too, through which a braid decays to another
braid by emitting an actively interacting braid. Thirdly, two
neighboring braids may exchange a virtual actively interacting braid
and become two different braids, in what is called an exchange
interaction. Braid dynamics implies an analogue between actively
interacting braids and bosons.
We also invent a novel algebraic formalism for stable braids. With
this new tool, we derive conservation laws from interactions of the
braid excitations of spin networks. We show that actively
interacting braids form a noncommutative algebra under direction
interaction. Each actively interacting braid also behaves like a
morphism on non-actively interacting braids. These findings
reinforce the analogue between actively interacting braids and
bosons.
Another important discovery is that stable braids admit seven, and
only seven, discrete transformations that uniquely correspond to
analogues of C, P, T, and their products. Along with this
finding, a braid's electric charge appears to be a function of a
conserved quantity, effective twist, of the braids, and thus is
quantized in units of 1/3. In addition, each $CPT$-multiplet of
actively interacting braids has a unique, characteristic
non-negative integer. Braid interactions turn out to be invariant
under C, P, and T.
Finally, we present an effective description, based on Feynman
diagrams, of braid dynamics. This language manifests the analogue
between actively interacting braids and bosons, as the topological
conservation laws permit them to be singly created and destroyed and
as exchanges of these excitations give rise to interactions between
braids that are charged under the topological conservation rules.
Additionally, we find a constraint on probability amplitudes of
braid interactions.
We discuss some subtleties, open issues, future directions, and work
in progress at the end.
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Emergent Matter of Quantum GeometryWan, Yidun 01 August 2009 (has links)
This thesis studies matter emergent as topological excitations of
quantum geometry in quantum gravity models. In these models, states
are framed four-valent spin networks embedded in a topological three
manifold, and the local evolution moves are dual Pachner moves.
We first formulate our theory of embedded framed four-valent spin
networks by proposing a new graphic calculus of these networks. With
this graphic calculus, we study the equivalence classes and the
evolution of these networks, and find what we call 3-strand braids,
as topological excitations of embedded four-valent spin networks.
Each 3-strand braid consists of two nodes that share three edges
that may or may not be braided and twisted. The twists happen to be
in units of 1/3. Under certain stability condition, some 3-strand
braids are stable.
Stable braids have rich dynamics encoded in our theory by dual
Pachner moves. Firstly, all stable braids can propagate as induced
by the expansion and contraction of other regions of their host spin
network under evolution. Some braids can also propagate actively, in
the sense that they can exchange places with substructures adjacent
to them in the graph under the local evolution moves. Secondly, two
adjacent braids may have a direct interaction: they merge under the
evolution moves to form a new braid if one of them falls into a
class called actively interacting braids. The reverse of a direct
interaction may happen too, through which a braid decays to another
braid by emitting an actively interacting braid. Thirdly, two
neighboring braids may exchange a virtual actively interacting braid
and become two different braids, in what is called an exchange
interaction. Braid dynamics implies an analogue between actively
interacting braids and bosons.
We also invent a novel algebraic formalism for stable braids. With
this new tool, we derive conservation laws from interactions of the
braid excitations of spin networks. We show that actively
interacting braids form a noncommutative algebra under direction
interaction. Each actively interacting braid also behaves like a
morphism on non-actively interacting braids. These findings
reinforce the analogue between actively interacting braids and
bosons.
Another important discovery is that stable braids admit seven, and
only seven, discrete transformations that uniquely correspond to
analogues of C, P, T, and their products. Along with this
finding, a braid's electric charge appears to be a function of a
conserved quantity, effective twist, of the braids, and thus is
quantized in units of 1/3. In addition, each $CPT$-multiplet of
actively interacting braids has a unique, characteristic
non-negative integer. Braid interactions turn out to be invariant
under C, P, and T.
Finally, we present an effective description, based on Feynman
diagrams, of braid dynamics. This language manifests the analogue
between actively interacting braids and bosons, as the topological
conservation laws permit them to be singly created and destroyed and
as exchanges of these excitations give rise to interactions between
braids that are charged under the topological conservation rules.
Additionally, we find a constraint on probability amplitudes of
braid interactions.
We discuss some subtleties, open issues, future directions, and work
in progress at the end.
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Geodesic paths and topological charges in quantum systemsGrangeiro Souza Barbosa Lima, Tiago Aecio 16 December 2016 (has links)
This dissertation focuses on one question: how should one drive an experimentally prepared state of a generic quantum system into a different target-state, simultaneously minimizing energy dissipation and maximizing the fidelity between the target and evolved-states? We develop optimal adiabatic driving protocols for general quantum systems, and show that these are geodesic paths.
Geometric ideas have always played a fundamental role in the understanding and unification of physical phenomena, and the recent discovery of topological insulators has drawn great interest to topology from the field of condensed matter physics. Here, we discuss the quantum geometric tensor, a mathematical object that encodes geometrical and topological properties of a quantum system. It is related to the fidelity susceptibility (an important quantity regarding quantum phase transitions) and to the Berry curvature, which enables topological characterization through Berry phases.
A refined understanding of the interplay between geometry and topology in quantum mechanics is of direct relevance to several emergent technologies, such as quantum computers, quantum cryptography, and quantum sensors. As a demonstration of how powerful geometric and topological ideas can become when combined, we present the results of an experiment that we recently proposed. This experimental work was done at the Google Quantum Lab, where researchers were able to visualize the topological nature of a two-qubit system in sharp detail, a startling contrast with earlier methods. To achieve this feat, the optimal protocols described in this dissertation were used, allowing for a great improvement on the experimental apparatus, without the need for technical engineering advances.
Expanding the existing literature on the quantum geometric tensor using notions from differential geometry and topology, we build on the subject nowadays known as quantum geometry. We discuss how slowly changing a parameter of a quantum system produces a measurable output of its response, merely due to its geometric nature. Next, we topologically characterize different classes of Hamiltonians using the Berry monopole charges, and establish their topological protection. Finally, we explore how such knowledge allows one to access topologically forbidden regions by adiabatically breaking and reestablishing symmetries.
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Branes and geometry in string and M-theorySehmbi, Gurdeep Singh January 2012 (has links)
This thesis is based on two papers by the author and consists of two parts. We review the recent developments in the theory of multiple M2-branes and 3-algebras leading to multiple D2-brane theories. The inclusion of flux terms for the supersymmetric BLG and ABJM theories of closed M2-branes is discussed and then generalised to open M2-branes. Here the boundary condition is derived and different BPS configurations are examined where we find a mass deformed Basu-Harvey equation for the M2-M5 system. The Lorentzian 3-algebra is then employed for obtaining a theory of D2-branes in a flux background, we then obtain the new fuzzy funnel solution of the system of D2-D4 branes in a flux. Matrix theories and their compactifications as well as noncommutative geometry and noncommutative gauge theories are reviewed with a discussion of their generalisations to three dimensions to be used to describe the M-theory three form potential. A new feature of string theory is then obtained called the quantum Nambu geometry (QNG). It is found by considering the action for D1-strings in a RR flux background and we demonstrate that there is a large flux double scaling limit where the action is dominated by a Chern-Simons-Myers coupling term. A classical solution to this is the quantised spacetime known as the quantum Nambu geometry. Various matrix models are obtained from this action, these are the large flux dominated terms of the full actions for the corresponding matrix models. The QNG gives rise to an expansion of D1-strings to D4-branes in the IIA theory, so we obtain an action for the large flux terms for this action which is verified by a dimensional reduction of the PST action describing M5-branes. We make a generalisation of the D4-brane action to describe M5-branes using a duality. We are describing the 3-form self-dual field strength of a non-abelian generalisation of the PST action.
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State Space Geometry of Low Dimensional Quantum MagnetsLambert, James January 2022 (has links)
In recent decades enormous progress has been made in studying the geometrical
structure of the quantum state space. Far from an abstraction, this geometric struc-
ture is defined operationally in terms of the distinguishability of states connected by
parameterizations that can be controlled in a laboratory. This geometry is manifest
in the kinds of response functions that are measured by well established experimen-
tal techniques, such as inelastic neutron scattering. In this thesis we explore the
properties of the state space geometry in the vicinity of the ground state of two
paradigmatic models of low dimensional magnetism. The first model is the spin-1
anti-ferromagnetic Heisenberg chain, which is a central example of symmetry pro-
tected topological physics in one dimension, exhibiting a non-local string order, and
symmetry protected short range entanglement. The second is the Kitaev honeycomb
model, a rare example of an analytically solvable quantum spin liquid, characterized
by long range topological order.
In Chapter 2 we employ the single mode approximation to estimate the genuine
multipartite entanglement in the spin-1 chain as a function of the unaxial anisotropy
up to finite temperature. We find that the genuine multipartite entanglement ex-
hibits a finite temperature plateau, and recove the universality class of the phase
transition induced by negative anisotropy be examining the finite size scaling of the
quantum Fisher information. In Chapter 4 we map out the zero temperature phase
diagram in terms of the QFI for a patch of the phase space parameterized by the
anisotropy and applied magnetic field, establishing that any non-zero anisotropy en-
hances that entanglement of the SPT phase, and the robustness of the phase to
finite temperatures. We also establish a connection between genuine multipartite
entanglement and state space curvature.
In Chapter 3 we turn to the Kitaev honeycomb model and demonstrate that,
while the QFI associated to local operators remains trivial, the second derivative
of such quantities with respect to the driving parameter exhibit divergences. We
characterize the critical exponents associated with these divergences. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Systems composed of many bodies tend to order as their energy is reduced. Steam,
a state characterized by the complete disorder of the constituent water molecules,
condenses to liquid water as the temperature (energy) decreases, wherein the water
molecules are organized enough for insects to walk atop them. Water freezes to ice,
which is so ordered that it can hold sleds and skaters. Quantum mechanics allows for
patterns of organization that go beyond the solid-liquid-gas states. These patterns
are manifest in the smallest degrees of freedom in a solid, the electrons, and are
responsible for fridge magnets and transistors. While quantum systems still tend to
order at lower energies, they are characterized by omni-present fluctuations that can
conceal hidden forms of organization. One can imagine that the states of matter
live in a vast space, where each point represents a different pattern. In this thesis
we show that by probing the geometry of this space, we can detect hidden kinds of
order that would be otherwise invisible to us.
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Conformal geometry, representation theory and linear fieldsDiemer, Tammo. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn, 1999. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 121-123).
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Berry's phase driven nonlinear optical and transport effects in solidsMatsyshyn, Oles 22 November 2021 (has links)
In this thesis, research starts by questioning Berry curvature dipole's role in electronic properties in solids. Strongly inspired by the recent studies, we discover a more profound interpretation of the Berry curvature dipole. It is demonstrated that the anomalous correction to the electron acceleration is proportional to the Berry curvature dipole and is responsible for the Non-linear Hall effect recently discovered in materials with broken inversion symmetry. This allows uncovering a deeper meaning of the Berry curvature dipole as a non-linear version of the Drude weight that serves as a measurable order parameter for broken inversion symmetry in metals. Later, we introduce the Quantum Rectification Sum Rule in time-reversal invariant materials is derived by showing that the integral over frequency of the rectification conductivity depends solely on the Berry connection and not on the band energies or relaxation rates. In the final part of the thesis, we use the Keldysch-Floquet formalism to obtain non-perturbative predictions of the optical responses in solids, mainly focusing on the clean limit response of systems with broken time-reversal symmetry.
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[pt] INVESTIGANDO GEOMETRIA QUÂNTICA E CRITICALIDADE QUÂNTICA POR UM MARCADOR DE FIDELIDADE / [en] INVESTIGATING QUANTUM GEOMETRY AND QUANTUM CRITICALITY BY A FIDELITY MARKERANTONIO LIVIO DE SOUSA CRUZ 17 October 2023 (has links)
[pt] A investigação da geometria quântica em semicondutores e isoladores
tornou-se significativa devido às suas implicações nas características dos materiais. A noção de geometria quântica surge considerando a métrica quântica
do estado de Bloch da banda de valência, que é definido a partir da sobreposição dos estados de Bloch em momentos ligeiramente diferentes. Ao integrar a
métrica quântica em toda a zona de Brillouin, introduzimos uma quantidade
que chamamos de número de fidelidade, que significa a distância média entre
estados de Bloch adjacentes. Além disso, apresentamos um formalismo para
expressar o número de fidelidade como um marcador de fidelidade local no espaço real que pode ser definido em qualquer sítio da rede. O marcador pode ser
calculado diretamente diagonalizando o hamiltoniano da rede que descreve o
comportamento das partículas na rede. Posteriormente, o conceito de número
e marcador de fidelidade é estendido para temperatura finita utilizando a teoria de resposta linear, conectando-os a medições experimentais que envolvem
analisar o poder de absorção óptica global e local quando o material é exposto
à luz linearmente polarizada. Particularmente para materiais bidimensionais,
a opacidade do material permite a determinação direta do número de fidelidade espectral, permitindo a detecção experimental do número de fidelidade.
Finalmente, um marcador de fidelidade não local é introduzido considerando a
divergência da métrica quântica. Este marcador é postulado como um indicador
universal de transições de fase quântica, assumindo que o momento cristalino
permanece um número quântico válido. Este marcador não local pode ser interpretado como uma função de correlação dos estados de Wannier, que são
funções de onda localizadas que descrevem estados eletrônicos em um cristal.
A generalidade e aplicabilidade destes conceitos são demonstradas através da
investigação de vários isoladores topológicos e transições de fase topológicas em
diferentes dimensões. Essas descobertas elaboram o significado dessas quantidades e sua conexão com vários fenômenos fundamentais na física da matéria
condensada. / [en] The investigation of quantum geometry in semiconductors and insulators
has become significant due to its implications for material characteristics. The
notion of quantum geometry arises by considering the quantum metric of the
valence-band Bloch state, which is defined from the overlap of the Bloch states
at slightly different momenta. By integrating the quantum metric through-out the Brillouin zone, we introduce a quantity that we call fidelity number,
which signifies the average distance between adjacent Bloch states. Furthermore, we present a formalism to express the fidelity number as a local fidelity
marker in real space that can be defined on every lattice site. The marker can
be calculated directly by diagonalizing the lattice Hamiltonian that describes
particle behavior on the lattice. Subsequently, the concept of the fidelity number and marker is extended to finite temperature using linear-response theory,
connecting them to experimental measurements which involves analyze the
global and local optical absorption power when the material is exposed to
linearly polarized light. Particularly for two-dimensional materials, the material s opacity enables straightforward determination of the fidelity number
spectral, allowing for experimental detection of the fidelity number. Finally,
a nonlocal fidelity marker is introduced by considering the divergence of the
quantum metric. This marker is postulated as a universal indicator of quantum phase transitions, assuming the crystalline momentum remains a valid
quantum number. This nonlocal marker can be interpreted as a correlation
function of Wannier states, which are localized wave functions describing electronic states in a crystal. The generality and applicability of these concepts
are demonstrated through the investigation of various topological insulators
and topological phase transitions across different dimensions. These findings
elaborate the significance of these quantities and their connection to various
fundamental phenomena in condensed matter physics.
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[pt] DETECÇÃO ÓPTICA DE PROPRIEDADES GEOMÉTRICAS QUÂNTICAS EM SUPERCONDUTORES SINGLETOS / [en] OPTICAL DETECTION OF QUANTUM GEOMETRICAL PROPERTIES IN SINGLET SUPERCONDUCTORSDAVID FERNANDO PORLLES LOPEZ 02 July 2024 (has links)
[pt] A geometria quântica na física da matéria condensada nos permite
entender várias propriedades geométricas dos estados da zona de Brillouin,
como a curvatura de Berry e a métrica quântica. Especialmente em relação
a esta última, foram observados estudos que mostram sua relação com a
supercondutividade. Motivados por estas investigações, esta dissertação visa
investigar as propriedades geométricas quânticas de supercondutores singletos,
como os tipos s-wave e d-wave, e identificar sua relação com várias respostas
eletromagnéticas. Começamos mostrando a descrição desses supercondutores
através da teoria do campo médio, posteriormente analisando sua métrica
quântica, que é definida pela sobreposição de dois estados de quasihole em
momentos ligeiramente diferentes. Subsequentemente, estudamos o número de
fidelidade, que é definido como a integração de momento da métrica quântica
e representa a distância média entre estados de quasihole vizinhos. Além
disso, expressamos esse número de fidelidade como um marcador de fidelidade
definido localmente em cada sítio da rede, o que nos permite observar o
efeito de impurezas não magnéticas nesse marcador. Para supercondutores
de tipo s-wave, mostramos que respostas eletromagnéticas como a absorção no
infravermelho estão relacionadas à métrica quântica, enquanto, por outro lado,
a corrente paramagnética e a função dielétrica estão relacionadas ao número de
fidelidade, que por sua vez é determinado pelo comprimento de coerência. Por
outro lado, para supercondutores de tipo d-wave, observamos que sua métrica
quântica mostra um comportamento singular e que seu número de fidelidade
diverge. O resultado mais relevante desta dissertação é que descobrimos que
supercondutores singletos, descritos pela teoria do campo médio BCS, exibem
uma métrica quântica não trivial, e que para supercondutores de tipo s-wave
as respostas eletromagnéticas mencionadas estão diretamente relacionadas à
geometria quântica, o que não havia sido encontrado anteriormente. / [en] Quantum geometry in condensed matter physics allows us to understand
various geometric properties of the Brillouin zone states, such as the Berry
curvature and the quantum metric. Especially in relation to the latter, studies
have been observed that show its relationship with superconductivity. Motivated by these investigations, this dissertation aims to investigate the quantum geometric properties of singlet superconductors, such as s-wave and d-wave
types, and identify their relation to various electromagnetic responses. We begin by showing the description of these superconductors through mean field theory, subsequently analyzing their quantum metric, which is defined by the
overlap of two quasihole states at slightly different momenta. Subsequently,
we study the fidelity number, which is defined as the momentum integration
of the quantum metric and represents the average distance between neighboring quasihole states. Furthermore, we express this fidelity number as a fidelity
marker defined locally at each lattice site, which allows us to observe the effect
of non-magnetic impurities on this marker. For s-wave superconductors, we
show that electromagnetic responses such as infrared absorption are related
to the quantum metric, while on the other hand, the paramagnetic current
and the dielectric function are related to the fidelity number, which in turn
is determined by the coherence length. On the other hand, for d-wave super-conductors, we observe that their quantum metric shows a singular behavior
and that their fidelity number diverges. The most relevant result of this dissertation is that we have discovered that singlet superconductors, described by
the BCS mean field theory, exhibit a nontrivial quantum metric, and that for
s-wave superconductors the aforementioned electromagnetic responses are directly related to the quantum geometry, which has not been found previous.
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